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Keturah (, Qəṭūrā, possibly meaning "incense";Schloen, J. David. "Caravans, Kenites, and Casus Belli: Enmity and Alliance in the Song of Deborah." The Catholic Biblical Quarterly, vol. 55, no. 1, 1993, pp. 18–38. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/43721140. ) was a wife (1917 Jewish Publication Society of America translation). "And Abraham took another wife, and her name was Keturah...." and a (1917 Jewish Publication Society of America translation). "And the sons of Keturah, Abraham’s concubine...." of the Biblical patriarch . According to the Book of Genesis, Abraham married Keturah after the death of his first wife, . Abraham and Keturah had six sons. According to Jewish tradition, she was a descendant of 's son .

One modern commentator on the has called Keturah "the most ignored significant person in the ". The medieval Jewish commentator , and some previous rabbinical commentators, related a traditional belief that Keturah was the same person as , although this idea cannot be found in the biblical text.

(2026). 9780060625610, HarperCollins.
However, Hagar was Sarah's Egyptian maidservant.


Sources
Keturah is mentioned in two passages of the : in the Book of Genesis and in the First Book of Chronicles. Additionally, she is mentioned in Antiquities of the Jews by the 1st-century Romano-Jewish historian , in the , the , the on the Torah, the , and various other writings of Jewish theologians and philosophers.

has said "Josephus records evidence of the prolific non-Jewish polymath Alexander Polyhistor, who in turn cites the historian Cleodemus Malchus, who states that two of the sons of Abraham by Keturah joined ' campaign in Africa, and that Heracles, without doubt the greatest Greek hero of them all, married the daughter of one of them."

(1998). 9780520208537, University of California Press. .

According to Doctor of Anthropology Paula M. McNutt, it is generally recognized that there is nothing specific in the biblical traditions recorded in Genesis, including those regarding Abraham and his family, that can be definitively related to known history in or around in the early second millennium B.C.

(1999). 9780664222659, Westminster John Knox Press. .


Relationship with Abraham
Keturah is referred to in Genesis as "another wife" of Abraham ( Strong's Concordance, Hebrew word #376.). In First Chronicles, she is called Abraham's "concubine" ( Strong's Concordance, Hebrew word #6370.).

According to one opinion in the midrashic work Genesis Rabbah, Keturah and Hagar are names for the same person, whom Abraham remarried after initially expelling. Genesis Rabbah 61:4 This opinion was adopted and popularized by 11th-century scholar . Possible justifications for this opinion include the fact that Keturah is referred to as Abraham's concubine (in the singular), and several other verses which suggest that the descendants of Hagar and Keturah lived in the same territory or formed a single ethnic group. refers to "Hagrites" (descendants of Hagar?) who later lived in the same region that was known to be inhabited by the descendants of Keturah. Also, in the "Medanites" (apparently descended from Keturah) and "Ishmaelites" (descended from Hagar) appear to be interchangeable. Also, in the "Midianites" (descended from Keturah") and "Ishmaelites" appear to be interchangeable. See , Ki Karov Elecha: Breishit, p.195 However, this idea was rejected by another rabbi in Genesis Rabbah, as well as by traditional commentators such as Ibn Ezra, , and . The Book of Jubilees also supports the conclusion that Keturah and Hagar were two different people, by stating that Abraham waited until after Sarah's death before marrying Keturah.Jubilees 19:11. According to modern scholar Richard Elliott Friedman, the identification of Keturah with Hagar has "no basis ... in the text".

Genesis Rabbah interprets the name Keturah in accordance with the opinion that she was identical to Hagar: the name was said to be related to the Aramaic ketur (knot) to imply that she was "bound" and did not have sexual relations with anyone else from the time she left Abraham until her return.

(1985). 9780891309338, Scholars Press.
The name Keturah was alternatively said to be derived from the ketoret (meaning "incense" in Hebrew).


Descendants
Keturah bore Abraham six sons: , , Medan, Midian, , and . Genesis and First Chronicles also list seven of her grandsons (Sheba, Dedan, Ephah, , Hanoch, Abida, and Eldaah). Genesis records that Abraham gave them gifts and sent them to the East, while making son of Sarah his primary heir. Keturah's sons were said to have represented the Arab tribes who lived south and east of (). According to the authors and Malchus, people were descended from Epher.
(2019). 9780567660930, Bloomsbury Publishing. .

According to the African (Igbo) writer , the 18th-century English theologian John Gill believed the African people were descended from Abraham and Keturah.

(1995). 9780142437162, Penguin Books. .
According to the Baháʼí author John Able, Baháʼís consider their founder, Bahá'u'lláh, to have been "descended doubly, from both Abraham and Sarah, and separately from Abraham and Keturah."
(2026). 9780970284754, John Able Books Ltd.. .

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